Pakistan condemns attempted Houthi missile attack on UAE

A helicopter flies over the downtown skyline of Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on April 20, 2020. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 31 January 2022
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Pakistan condemns attempted Houthi missile attack on UAE

  • The UAE shot down a ballistic missile fired by Iran-aligned Yemeni rebels
  • Nobody was hurt in the early-hour attack, the third in consecutive weeks

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Monday condemned an attempted missile attack by Yemen’s Houthi rebels on the United Arab Emirates (UAE), lauding the Emirati air defenses for intercepting the projectile. 
The UAE shot down a ballistic missile fired by the Iran-aligned Houthi rebels during a visit by Israel’s president on Monday, the latest attack to target the Middle East financial hub. 
Nobody was hurt in the early-hour attack, the third in consecutive weeks on the wealthy Gulf nation that is part of the Arab coalition fighting the Iran-backed rebels in Yemen. 
“We consider these attacks as a grave violation of international law and a serious threat to regional peace and security,” the Pakistani foreign office said in a statement. 
“Pakistan calls for their immediate cessation.”

Islamabad reaffirmed its solidarity with the people and the government of the UAE. 
The latest Houthi missile was fired as Isaac Herzog made the first visit to the UAE by an Israeli president, after the countries established diplomatic ties under the 2020 Abraham Accords. 
The Emirati defense ministry said it responded to the attack by destroying the missile launch site in Yemen’s northern Al-Jawf region, releasing black-and-white footage of the explosion. 


Pakistan confers highest civilian award on Jordan’s King Abdullah II

Updated 16 November 2025
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Pakistan confers highest civilian award on Jordan’s King Abdullah II

  • King Abdullah II, President Asif Ali Zardari review regional and global developments, with a focus on the Middle East
  • The two leaders reject any displacement of Palestinians, emphasize need for a Two-State solution, Zardari’s office says

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari on Sunday conferred Pakistan’s highest civilian award, ‘Nishan-e-Pakistan,’ on Jordan’s King Abdullah II during his state visit to the South Asian country, President Zardari’s office said.

The honor was bestowed on the visiting monarch at a special investiture ceremony attended by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, members of the federal cabinet, military chiefs and members of the diplomatic corps.

On the occasion, the Jordanian king also conferred on President Zardari the ‘Wisam Al-Nahdah Al-Mursa,’ or the Order of the Renaissance, according to the Pakistan president’s office.

Jordan’s King Abdullah II conferrs ‘Wisam Al-Nahdah Al-Mursa,’ or the Order of the Renaissance, on Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari on November 16, 2025. (PID)

President Zardari and King Abdullah earlier held a meeting, at which they reaffirmed longstanding, fraternal ties between Pakistan and Jordan, and discussed the full range of bilateral relations.

“They also reviewed regional and international developments of mutual concern, with particular focus on peace, stability and security in the Middle East,” the president’s office said in a statement.

“They noted the need to build on the strength of these relations and to encourage greater people-to-people contact between the two countries.”

Both sides underlined the importance of working together in multilateral forums and of promoting humanitarian and development cooperation, according to President Zardari’s office.

On Palestine, the president and the Jordanian king reiterated their shared principled position on post-war Gaza.

“They rejected any displacement of Palestinians and emphasized the need for a Two-State solution. They called for the establishment of an independent, sovereign, viable and contiguous State of Palestine on pre-June 1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital,” the statement read.

“Both leaders expressed confidence in the future direction of Pakistan-Jordan relations and agreed to maintain close coordination on bilateral, regional and global issues.”